Within day power prices today soared above £300 per megawatt hour within minutes of National Grid issuing a Capacity Market Notice.
At around 1pm, the Electricity System Operator said the system looked set to be short of capacity from 5.30pm. However, an hour later, the notice was cancelled.
The notice instructs generators to be ready to meet that shortfall so that the ESO can comfortably keep the lights on. The alerts system is automated, with notices cancelled as soon as the required capacity buffer is achieved.
However, coming on a warm September day, the warning illustrates the increasing challenge of running the grid, given the ESO in recent months has been paying generators to stop exporting power to the grid and this summer sought emergency powers to disconnect distributed generation due to very low demand on the transmission system.
Meanwhile flexible generators and traders able to react to the notice stood to enjoy a profitable Tuesday.
Details here.
Story updated and amended following cancellation of CM notice.
I had a notice the price was going down from my supplier, is a con? to make money from the disabled/customer who need power to cool them down.
I see that the notice was only active for one hour. Did that push the market enough to increase production?
Basically yes. It’s an automated notice and when there’s enough of a buffer to meet security of supply standard, it cancels itself. Think only happened once or twice before…
It is the French market which sucks up any power available, prices there saw some £ 1,000/MWh:
https://www.montelnews.com/en/story/french-power-soars-to-eur-1122-mwh-amid-heat-low-wind/1148125
The remark on the UK’s atom power restrictions by the grid authority is non-relevant.
The non-availability of the atom circus has driven up the prices and certainly the speculation of the traders.
Germany’s authorities are investigating the top price today never seen before:
https://www.montelnews.com/en/story/german-power-soars-to-eur-4000-on-outages-low-wind/1148483